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Name: Rebekah
Birthday: 7/13/1978
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Monday, March 17, 2008

100 Percent Pure

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: The makers of Ivory soap pride themselves on making a product that’s “99.44 percent pure.” Now, that might be great for soap, but when it comes to personal holiness, 99.44 percent pure isn’t pure.

First Peter commands us, “Be holy in all your conduct" (1:15). That includes our attitudes and thoughts and outward actions.

To demand 100 percent perfection might seem hopeless. Nobody can be totally perfect—except for Jesus. And we can be completely pure because of His blood and forgiveness.

Through the cross of Christ and the power of the Holy Spirit, our hearts can be 100 percent pure. Do you want to be 100 percent pure inside and out? If so, ask God to forgive you for every impurity, to cleanse your heart, and to keep you pure.

With Seeking Him, I’m Nancy Leigh DeMoss.

 


Sunday, March 02, 2008

 

Moderation in all things, except in zeal for Christ.

overwhelming

 

 

 


Filled to the Brim
with Beth Moore

“His mother said to the servants,
'Whatever He says to you, do it.'” (John 2:5)

We love to see other people enjoy our kids. Mary may have felt that way as she sought Jesus’ help with the problem at the wedding at Cana of Galilee. Perhaps she was one of the women coordinating the wedding when she discovered the need. She went to Jesus and said five words, "They have no more wine.” She didn't tell Him how to do His job. She just stated the fact and the context of Jesus’ first miracle was set in motion. 

Jesus told her they were not in charge and reminded her His hour had not come, but Mary had confidence in His judgment because He was the Son of most high God. She told the servants to do whatever He said. If it hadn't been the Father's timing, Jesus would not have done what happened next.

He instructed the servants to fill six stone pots with water that were used for ritual and ceremonial cleansing. The servants did as Jesus told them. It occurred to me that ritual cleansing jars could represent the ceremony of our own spiritual disciplines in the faith, because we are called earthen vessels that hold the all-surpassing power of God in 2 Corinthians 4:7.

The Pharisees’ strict adherence to Moses’ Law during the time of Christ often creates negative feelings toward ritual and ceremony, but not all ritual is bad. There are spiritual disciplines that are part of the ceremony of our loving relationship with Jesus. We are called to study God’s word, have an active prayer life with fasting, express our worship and gather in fellowship with believers. However, without the Holy Spirit spiritual disciplines become dry legalism.

I think there are three different states of our earthen jars. The first one is empty. Perhaps you are running on empty because in the course of normal living people keep dipping into your jar. Jesus steps into the picture and says, “Don't hang your head. Bring me your emptiness because that's why I came."

The first action Jesus took at the wedding was to get the empty jars filled with water, but the wine was obviously preferred because Jesus didn’t say, “Just fill it up and let them drink water.” He filled them and then changed the water to the best wine.

It could be that we are just filled up with water and doing fine. But Jesus came to make you more than just fine. It is to your Father's glory that you bear much fruit showing yourself to be Christ's disciple. The enemy can tempt us away when we have settled for water in our jars. His new wine symbolizes His blood shed for the remission of our sins and establishes the new way of Christ’s kingdom.

Paul used a familiar concept of “being under the influence of wine” to teach something unfamiliar: being filled with the Holy Spirit (Eph. 5:17). When we are not ruled by our fleshly nature, we have clarity of vision. As we live under His spiritual authority, He does through our vessel what we could never do for ourselves. We can feel the influence of the new, spiritual wine when we are filled with His power and produce the fruit of Spirit.

In a time of emptiness, God asked me, "What is it that you want, Beth?" I answered, “Lord, I want Your word to jump off the page and into my heart. I want to love you more than anything in this world and to see you revealed.” He told me, "Beth, pray for it!"  We can be filled to the brim and even to overflowing if we pray for it!

When we pray according to the will of God, we can thank Him in advance because we already have it. Weeping may last for a night but joy comes in the morning. When we know we can anticipate joy, we can go ahead and have some joy in advance.

This Week
There is a big difference between fine and being filled with the new wine of the Holy Spirit. Ask God to fill you with His Spirit to give you a soul that delights greatly in Him, and then start rejoicing.

Prayer
“Father, I want to be to be filled to the brim with the new wine of Your Spirit.“

 

 


Saturday, March 01, 2008

 Ocean

Be Still!

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: “Be still and know that I am God.” That’s a popular phrase from the Bible—one you’ve probably heard. But did you know that verse was written in a context a lot like ours? It’s from Psalm 46, which says, “The nations raged; the kingdoms were moved” (verse 6). It describes great international turmoil.

But God is involved in the world. Verse 9 says, “He makes wars to cease to the end of the earth; He breaks the bow and cuts the spear in two.” That’s a promise that one day God will bring an end to all war.

So what are we to do in the meantime? Let go. Don’t try to take control or figure everything out. Sometimes we just need to turn off the TV news and listen to what God has to say through His Word. “Be still and know that I am God.”

When was the last time you were still before Him?

With Seeking Him, I’m Nancy Leigh DeMoss.

www.reviveourhearts.com

 

 


Thursday, February 14, 2008

Linger Just a Moment Longer

Lysa TerKeurst

 

 “And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”

Matthew 28:20b (NIV)

         

Devotion:

Breathe in every moment of your day today.

Recognize what a gift today is.

Grab someone you love and let your embrace linger just a moment longer.

Take mental pictures of the toothless grin of your baby, the tousled hair of your toddler, the crooked smile of your teenager.

Hold your husband's hand.

Look past the dirty dishes in the sink, the laundry piled high, the stuff the kids left out and see the beauty entangled in all this evidence of life.

And thank God for it all. Right now, in this second, see the blessing.

I guess I am in a reflective mood this week because I sat beside a family that so unexpectedly had to say goodbye to their Dad and husband. One minute the mom and daughters rushed past him giggling their way to the mall. I imagine the typical quick, "Love ya, see ya."

 

Less than an hour later, he was riding his bike when a car veered across the center lane and struck and killed him in front of my home.

 

The next day the family came over to my house and together we prayed at the place where his body was found.


So many questions. So many tears.

As we sat in the circle surrounded by broken bicycle parts, pressed down grass, and police paint marks - it all just seemed so unbelievable. My neighbor Holly and I prayed and hoped that somehow through our fragile words the peace of Jesus would fill the gaping holes in their hearts.

The thing that seemed to bring them the most comfort was knowing that we never left the scene of the accident. The minute we realized there was a cyclist involved, we started praying. We realized this was not just a victim – this was someone's Daddy. Someone's husband. Someone's friend. We were there when they pronounced him dead on the scene. We stayed until the accident was cleared and the coroner came and took his body. He was never alone. Not so much because we were there but because Jesus was there. I pray they know this.

Isn't this what every soul needs to know?

The very last words of Jesus recorded in the gospel of Matthew is, "And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age."

I have no idea what I might face, today, tomorrow, next week, or next year. No idea. Experiencing something like this forces you to see the stark reality of the brevity of life.

So, I will breathe in every moment of my day today.

I will recognize what a gift today is.

I will grab those I love and let my embrace linger just a moment longer.

I will take mental pictures.

I will hold my husband's hand.

And I will thank my Jesus for the gift of one more day.

 

Dear Lord, I recognize you are with me and those that I love.  Thank you for this comfort.  Please open my eyes to all my blessings today.  Cement in my heart what a gift today really is.  And may I never take for granted those I love.  In Jesus’ Name, Amen.

 

 



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